Review #1
Noisy Beat (The Dresden File #7) audiobook free
Genre: Urbanized Fantasy/Paranormal
Rating: 4.5/5 hit
In this seventh installment of the Dresden File television series, the Snow-white Council is that still at war with the Burgundy Tribunal ghouls. Thomas, Harry’s brother, is that living with Harry in his dinky apartment right behind his sister disowned him. Mavra comes to Harry with a ask: Bring her the Word of Kemmler or she will hurt Murphy. As Harry begins to look for the Word of Kemmler at the same time the book about the famous Erlking of the Fae, Breathe Half-halo de Erlking, he uncovers anything that’s going go down on Samhain at the same time meets several people who are Kemmler’s followers… similar Kemmler who happened to possess his very possess comrade Bob the skull. Harry is that still dealing with the aftermath of topical the living daylights out of his palm, at the same time he is that having desires of Lasciel, the demon whose coin he grabbed then and buried. The color of her is that enough to impart a significant affect over him, at the same time she is that quite convincing as she knows him of her desire to promote him survive all he has to deal with. He has a problematic time standing company at the same time resisting her.
Can Harry somehow look for the Word of Kemmler, finish Kemmler’s disciples, at the same time get it to Mavra in time without the Snow-white Tribunal finding out at the same time summarily executing him?
A ubiquitous topic in these books is that Harry all the time taking a beating at the same time being nearby doom’s door. This book was no different, but I’m really enjoying the Lasciel nuance. She is that manipulative, obviously, but also So utterly believable, at the same time we are following as Harry is that slipping more and more into her tenacious despite that he knows impartially that NO quality can come from letting her have more power over him. This book practically makes the reader fall in love with her at once! She seems so spiritual at the same time almond! I don’t complain Harry one bit for his emotions toward her. He is that becoming more and more conflicted. It will be exciting to look where that storyline goes.
One gizmo I really enjoy about these books is that the serious clarification/exploration of the supernatural nuances. The Erlking namely is that a well-known figure in Faerie lore, at the same time it was exciting to look how he was dealt with in this book. Necromancy in general is that explained in a interesting method – such that it sort of makes sense. Really, Jim Butcher always does a quality job of providing supernatural things in a really reasonable method — as in, they are barely believable enough. I appreciate that, at the same time it makes the books enjoyable to read. Harry’s sarcasm is that, as usual, funny at the same time amusing, but is that it barely me or is that he getting darker? Much less funny? It’s inevitable, but I good of miss his direct playfulness at the same time positivity. He is that losing just a little more of that in every book.
I am exactly looking forward to continuing on with the television series.
Review #2
Noisy Beat (The Dresden File #7) audiobook streamming online
I have been reading (at the same time mostly rereading, because I finished keeping up with the television series right behind Configurations) the Dresden File for years at the same time this is that one of my winner books of the television series; it’s sheathed with Summer Knight for absolute fav.
Whereas my winner part of Summer Knight is that the concentrate on the nonhuman manners – particularly the Fae, who I think are really but written as an amoral Other more precisely than barely nondescript evil nonhumans – than anyway I like about Noisy Beat is that the concentrate on no one of Harry’s best properties: his dry at the same time mocking humor (this book reads as very funny to me) as but as his ability to think on his feet at the same time implementation adaptability to face at the same time change situations that seem hopeless (the entire situation with the necromancers; barely: all of it). I also really like the supporting manners in this novel (Thomas Raith, a Snow-white Tribunal ghoul who’s also Harry’s half-brother, at the same time Waldo Butters, an ME who’s a recent addition to the in-the-know mass), the twisty-turny plot (1st this, then that, at the same time oh look anyone completely believed to decide merit of some downsides to miracle), at the same time the fact this book is that more reflective on some parts on the Dresdenverse than other books have been (everything from wizard curative to the meaning of choice to the real earn of the Wardens gets a mention).
Than anyway I don’t like about the Dresden File – that Dresden himself is that a sexist ass, which doesn’t change even though it does get much less pronounced with some manners over time (I’d forgotten about Murphy helping damage nest of Merk Tribunal ghouls in the book before this one) – is that much less pronounced in Noisy Beat for one reason: the shortcoming of ladies manners. This is that anything I’m torn on. I’m joyful that, at lesser for one book, Dresden’s patronizing chauvinism plays a relatively insignificant role at the same time I didn’t have to shackles up with it for long as that are specifically five ladies manners in this book that play no matter what role – Murphy (who goes off to vacation in Hawaii at the very beginning of the book; she’s completely uninvolved in others of the plot), Mavra (a Merk Tribunal ghoul blackmailing Dresden for the plot’s macguffin who indicates up for two scenes that bookend the novel), Kumori (an apprentice to one of the necromancers, like in the maintenance of eliminating doom), the Corpsetaker (one of the real necromancers at the same time who only counts on this list because they’re in a stolen woman's body for almost all of the book), at the same time Shiela (the imprint of the Fallen Angel Lasciel) – at the same time, of the five, only Shiela/Lasciel recur more than a few times at the same time are meant to be anything other outright villains. The manners are that (in that have at lesser one scene at the same time they’re dignified), but have little in the method of real characterization; they read much less like people at the same time more like archetypes (Lasciel is that the Temptress, Kumori is that the Misguided Lady, etc). This is that like expression ‘But, if example-MC neglects nonwhite manners in racist ways, barely have fewer nonwhite manners, shackles them in smallest roles meant to do/symbolize specific at the same time discrete things – in such a way having a smallest spectrum of possible interactions – at the same time that aren’t meant to be have quality connotations what; problem solved.’ As this would not ‘solve the problem’ of the example MC’s racism, such identical healing of ladies manners in Noisy Beat does not appropriately deal with the issue of Dresden’s sexism. Though somewhat masked, it’s still that at the same time will still return real force in later books.
Review #3
Audiobook Noisy Beat (The Dresden File #7) by Jim Butcher
7 books into the Dresden television series at the same time I’m still hooked. This one doesn’t bring anything brand new to the table, but this formula has worked throughout the television series so no true come in handy to change it still. Jim Butcher has a knack for creating no one memorable villains at the same time I think that’s than anyway has produced this television series so successful. It recalls me of the X file in definitions of the story assembly – for you’ve got a long term story arc dealing with the nuts at the same time bolts of the television series – Harry’s past, generic, sheltered riddles etc – at the same time in between we get these awesome “Savage of the week” types showing up in each individual book. This time we’ve had black sorcerers, werewolves, faerie queens, fallen angels, ghouls, at the same time numerous others bringing their nefarious schemes to Chicago. Now it’s necromancers mixing up problem (at the same time corpses) on Halloween night at the same time it’s right up to Harry to finish them. No Murphy now, but a couple of knowledgeable persons make an out of the blue outward appearance in a sweet izumi. One more amazing Dresden book
Review #4
Audio Noisy Beat (The Dresden File #7) narrated by James Marsters
I’m old. At the same time I’ve read thousands of books. This is that the best television series of its good. It keeps me up reading. It has me reaching for my kindle when I get up. I produced my wife move the passenger car so I can read. If I’m awakened, the phone (kindle) is that in my palm or nearby. Nothing gets me disappoint. I’m very into the television series to spend psychic energy or no matter what other good of energy when I would be reading. Seriously quality writing. Lots of humor that has me chuckling along. Increasingly complete at the same time seriously believably plot. Butcher doesn’t think obtuse is that necessary for complete plotting. At the same time when the writing is that this quality, that is that NO Come in handy for obtuse. I think I’m in adore. At the same time I’m not halfway through the television series. YES!
Review #5
Free audio Noisy Beat (The Dresden File #7) – in the audio player below
Number 7 in the Dresden television series — at this fri, anyone who’s still reading these books should know the score.
Anyone jumping in at this fri should finish at the same time move back.
Having misspoke that, the books still do the basic introductions for every recurring disposition at the same time concept whenever the crop up, which is that at the moment getting just a little tiring at the same time I they say that despite a two-year clearance between reading Blood Rituals at the same time this.
This one starts with Harry — monotonous as ever Harry: sleep-deprived, gallant, chivalrous at the same time ever on the verge of problem — living with his brother Thomas (look finish of book 6) in his cramped apartment.
The head plot revolves around the arrival of a bunch of necromancers to Chicago, looking for a number of wonderful mcGuffins in a row to become god-like at the same time kick off world-ending-like inconsistencies.
A number of the usual supporting manners don’t appear at all, or very little indeed — notably Karrin Murphy (or no matter what cop really) at the same time Misha.
But Butters, the rarely-mentioned honey examiner, gets a much accreted role here at the same time he’s amazing. A funny at the same time gifted, still permanently terrified personal with a passion for polka.
Overall I think this is that sheathed, with Summer Knight (#4), for my favourite this time in the television series.
This is that a very easy read; thrilling, but paced between the abundance action strings at the same time the “figure it out” strings involving Bob at the same time Butters. Harry’s dog, whom I don’t understand from earlier books, plays an ever-increasing “role” in the books which I like.
Plenty of pop-culture humour usually, attractive convinced this scored at lesser five out-loud laughs.
The sole over-arching storyline for the television series is that at the moment Harry’s “internal” fight with Lasciel, the fallen angel. This treads aqua a little here, but does its job of maintaining that ever-present sense of death for Harry’s future.
4 hit. These books are funny thrill rides, though not terribly memorable or substantial; doesn’t matter, I’ll keep reading.